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Gender-based
violence and property grabbing in Africa
Kaori Izumi, Extracted from Gender & Development,
Volume 15, Issue 1 March 2007
March 22, 2007
http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/content?content=10.1080/13552070601178823
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Abstract
Property grabbing
is a new form of gendered violence against women, threatening the
security of women across Southern and East Africa. Forced evictions
are often accompanied by further acts of violence, including physical
and mental harassment, and abuse. Widows are particularly vulnerable,
partly as a result of weakened customary practice and social safety
nets that used to provide support to widowed women and their children,
a situation made worse by the HIV and AIDS epidemic. Defending their
property has cost some women their lives, while other women have
lost their shelter and source of livelihoods, and have become destitute.
The harassment and humiliation that often accompany property grabbing
further strip women of their self-esteem, affecting their ability
to defend their rights.
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